As Jon Clements already said, the claim that diamond moderators have any power over audits is mistaken. As far as I know, we don't. We have no magic button to remove a post as an audit candidate, and we certainly don't have the power to remove a previous audit from a reviewer's history. So, while cathartic, bringing it to our attention is not all that useful.
The only thing a moderator can do to help you out is lift a review ban that you might have landed yourself in after failing an audit. The problem with this is, bans aren't handed out for failing a single audit, so in order to earn yourself a ban, you have to have made a number of bad reviews. Generally speaking, even when someone fails a bad audit, when we look their their history, we find that the ban is not completely unwarranted. There could conceivably be cases where we decide to shorten a ban, but frankly, we don't need the question to be open in order to do this. The Meta questions aren't even all that helpful, because no one ever gives a full description of all the recent audits they've failed...
The only real benefit in having a Meta question open (as opposed to closed as a duplicate of a canonical) is to allow discussion about the particular audit. I'll grant that this is sometimes useful; for example, when the audit is an interesting case and actually exposes a common misunderstanding about what you should be looking for in the review queues. But the more common case is far less interesting. It's just a post that got inexplicably upvoted and thus nominated by the system as an audit when it is really not a good example of something that fits our guidelines.
In these common cases, I believe it makes more sense to close the questions as duplicates of a canonical that explains:
- Audits are necessary to stop abuse in the review queues, and are, on the whole, quite effective at doing so.
- They are automatically chosen based on a set of heuristics, which are imperfect and occasionally subject to error. Sometimes, you get unlucky.
- Even then…errors don't happen all that often—keep in mind the inherent reporting bias: no one ever complains when they pass an audit.
- If you do come across a bad audit (whether or not you actually fail it), then you should swear under your breath, open the post in a new tab, and act on it as you normally would (i.e., downvote it, vote/flag to close it, etc.). This not only addresses the larger problem (bad content on our website), but also serves to disqualify the post as an audit for the benefit of future reviewers. (Questions with pending close votes are not chosen as audits, for example, and downvotes quickly disqualify posts as audits.)
There's no merit in repeating that advice each time on a new question, and doing so just risks important bits being left out. One of the most important things that gets left out is that last bullet point. People get so far as the "swear under your breath", but don't always follow through with the downvoting and close-voting. The majority of "bad audit" Meta questions I see don't have a downvote on the post in question when I click through to it. (At least, not until the Meta effect sets in, and that honestly is more harmful than it is helpful in the majority of cases. You don't need a militia to do what a single soldier can do.)
So, in summary: leave open the Meta questions about audits that are actually correct and need some explanation, leave open the Meta questions about audits that are controversial, but close the Meta questions as dupes when they're about audits that are obviously invalid.